A multi-threaded PDF password cracking utility equipped with commonly encountered password format builders and dictionary attacks.
pdfrip is a fast multithreaded PDF password cracking utility written in Rust with support for wordlist-based dictionary attacks, date, number range, and alphanumeric brute-forcing, and a custom query builder for password formats.
- Fast: Performs about 50k-100k+ passwords per second utilizing full CPU cores.
 - Custom Query Builder: You can write your own queries like 
STRING{69-420}which would generate and use a wordlist with the full number range. - Date Bruteforce: You can pass in a year which would bruteforce all 365 days of the year in 
DDMMYYYYformat which is a pretty commonly used password format for PDFs. - Number Bruteforce: Just give a number range like 
5000-100000and it would bruteforce with the whole range. - Default Bruteforce: Specify a maximum and optionally a minimum length for the password search and all passwords of length 4 up to the specified maximum consisting of letters and numbers (
a-zA-Z0-9) will be tried 
Install with cargo:
$ cargo install --git https://github.com/mufeedvh/pdfrip.git
Prerequisites:
- Git
 - Rust
 - Cargo (Automatically installed when installing Rust)
 - A C linker (Only for Linux, generally comes pre-installed)
 
$ git clone https://github.com/mufeedvh/pdfrip.git
$ cd pdfrip/
$ cargo build --release
The first command clones this repository into your local machine and the last two commands enters the directory and builds the source in release mode.
Get a list of all the arguments:
$ pdfrip --help
Start a dictionary attack with a wordlist:
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf wordlist rockyou.txt
Bruteforce number ranges for the password:
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf range 1000 9999
Bruteforce all dates in a span (inclusive in both ends) of years for the password in DDMMYYYY format:
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf date 1900 2000
Bruteforce arbitrary strings of length 4-8:
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf default-query --max-length 8
Bruteforce arbitrary strings of length 3:
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf default-query --max-length 3 --min-length 3
Build a custom query to generate a wordlist: (useful when you know the password format)
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf custom-query ALICE{1000-9999}
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf custom-query DOC-ID{0-99}-FILE
Enable preceding zeros for custom queries: (which would make {10-5000} to {0010-5000} matching the end range's digits)
$ pdfrip -f encrypted.pdf custom-query ALICE{10-9999} --add-preceding-zeros
Ways to contribute:
- Suggest a feature
 - Report a bug
 - Fix something and open a pull request
 - Help me document the code
 - Spread the word
 
Licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE for more information.
